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Archaeologists In The Czech Republic Found An Ice Age Hunters Toolkit Dating Back 30,000 Years
Martin NovkThe bundle of Ice Age tools unearthed at the Milovice IV archaeological site in the Czech Republic.Archaeologists in the Czech Republic have uncovered a remarkably well-preserved toolkit dating back roughly 30,000 years. Now, its shedding light on how Paleolithic hunters organized and maintained their gear while traveling across Ice Age Europe.The collection, discovered in southern Moravia, consists of 29 blades and points that were found gathered together in a single cluster. Researchers believe the tools were once bundled in a pouch that decayed long ago, leaving behind the exact configuration of a hunters tools.This assemblage appears to represent a personal toolkit that was either lost or discarded, wrote Dominik Chlachula and colleagues in a study published in the Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology. Insight into the lives of individuals is extremely rare for the Palaeolithic.A Rare Look Into The Daily Lives Of Paleolithic HuntersThe discovery was made during excavations at the Milovice IV archaeological site. The artifacts were recovered from a layer containing charcoal that dated back to between 30,250 and 29,550 years ago. The layer also included animal bones mainly from horses and reindeer and a fireplace, indicating that the toolkit was part of a temporary hunting camp.Unlike many Paleolithic artifacts that are found in disturbed or mixed deposits, this toolkit remained largely untouched, providing a rare and rather intimate glimpse into the life of an Ice Age hunter-gatherer.The toolkit was likely carried during a hunt and then either lost or intentionally left behind. The cluster can be interpreted as personal gear used during hunting expeditions, regularly maintained and occasionally modified until its eventual discard or loss in a residential camp, the researchers wrote.Journal of Paleolithic ArchaeologyThe cluster of tools in situ.Analysis revealed that the 29 artifacts were not a random assortment. The larger blades were used for processing medium to hard materials, while the smaller blades show wear consistent with cutting soft materials or working with animal hide. Six artifacts displayed fractures typically associated with projectiles, and at least one carried microscopic linear impact traces (MLITs), confirming that it had been used as a point on an arrow or spear.Perhaps more fascinating, however, is where these tools originated.Evidence Of Long-Distance Trade NetworksThe raw materials used to make the blades and points from the toolkit came from far beyond the site where they were found. Of the 29 artifacts, 19 were made of erratic flint from glacial deposits more than 80 miles to the north. Seven were made of radiolarite, likely from western Slovakia, and one was fashioned from opal sourced between 70 and 85 miles away.The variability of raw materials within the cluster can be attributed to several factors: direct collection by the bearer or their group from outcrops or other natural sources; exchange or sharing among groups or individuals visiting different raw material sites; reuse of older blanks from abandoned camps or workshops; collection from caches; or a combination of these practices, the authors wrote. Journal of Paleolithic ArchaeologyTraces of wear were seen on the blades.This distribution suggests the hunter either traveled long distances or participated in an extensive exchange network, though there is no evidence that can definitively confirm or dismiss any of these theories. The absence of larger tools like scrapers, however, suggests the toolkit was designed for lightweight mobility. More complex processing tasks likely took place back at base camps.What makes the Milovice IV find extraordinary is its clear connection to a single persons daily life. Most Paleolithic finds are either isolated tools or large, mixed deposits representing entire camps. This cluster, by contrast, captures a moment in time: a single hunters set of tools, prepared for a journey across the frozen landscape of Ice Age Europe, offering rare insight into daily life during the Gravettian period.After reading about the discovery of this Ice Age hunters toolkit, get another glimpse into the past through our gallery of reconstructed faces throughout history. Then, learn about the Lovers of Valdaro, a Stone Age couple locked in eternal embrace.The post Archaeologists In The Czech Republic Found An Ice Age Hunters Toolkit Dating Back 30,000 Years appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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